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I'm sure there's 40 billion reasons why I should not/should never have rooted for Hannah and Adam, but logic doesn't really play into these kinds of decisions. That last scene between them was so heartbreaking and yet wonderful at the same time. Reminds me of the scene between them in the hospital. Maybe nobody will know what I'm talking about when I say that but I hope someone does. I love wordless moments like that. They are phenomenal together, Driver and Dunham. I feel similarly about Emmy Rossum and Justin Chatwin from Shameless (a show I haven't watched for many seasons). The chemistry and partnership between them is just unmatched. I haven't seen anything with Adam Driver in it except for Girls and The Force Awakens, but I can only hope that he continues to do good work.

The one thing I've disliked about this season is how backburnered Shosh has been. They still have two episodes to give her something to do, but I'm not super optimistic.

→ So my friend Abby and I are going to try to rewatch Buffy and Angel using this watching order list. She is already in mid-season two and so in order to catch up with her I did the "short version" of season one. (Welcome to the Hellmouth, The Harvest, Angel, and Prophecy Girl.) Gosh, the sfx are so hard to watch, going back. I forgot how bad they were! But it's crazy how so many of the lines are familiar to me to this day. How many times did I watch Prophecy Girl? It must have been a bunch.

I got through When She Was Bad (2x01) last night, so if I keep up the pace I can catch up to her soon. Since I'm trying to get back into working out, I think what I'll do is bring my phone with me to the gym and watch it with headphones when I do the elliptical/bike. Good motivation! When She Was Bad was just a great lead-in to season two. I do think that the show matured ten-fold between season one and season two. It took what was great about the show in general in season one, the darkness in Buffy and the sacrifices she has to make, the strong ensemble and bond between the characters, the witty banter, Cordelia and Giles in general, and it just made it that much better. Season two is definitely when this show came into its own. Watching it now (almost 20 years later, fuck I'm old) it really still shows.

→ I have been quietly watching Girls since it came out and sadly I had completely missed the most recent season. But I recently caught up, thank goodness. I have to say the current season is pretty darn great. The writing in the first episode back was so on point that it's not even funny. I especially enjoyed the most recent Marnie-centric episode.

The only thing I am not thrilled with is the Jessa/Adam thing and how it's developing. It's especially hard to get behind them as a couple after Adam's attempt to reconcile with Hannah last season and how that scene just completely broke my heart. I think Jessa and Adam are great to watch together, but the revelation that they've both wanted each other for a long time didn't ring true to me. Plus they're both just too pretty together. Ick. Gross. I do love Fran, though. I am just not sure what I want for Hannah. When she and Adam were great together, they were phenomenal. So it's hard not to want that for her. But then maybe their time has passed? I don't know. And I am not sure how things are going to happen as far as her finding out about Adam and Jessa. I mean, he's meeting Jessa's family and agreeing to pay for her degree? And they still haven't told Hannah. I don't know how she will react when she finds out. I do know that I am still holding out for Ray and Marnie though. Also, Elijah is literally the best.

→ Unpopular opinion time? I am so annoyed by The 100 fandom. I was behind on the show when the thing happened. And I guess I'll spoiler cut this for anyone who is living under a rock.

I'm going to preface this by saying that I was a fan of Lexa and of the Clarke/Lexa relationship. I am such a non-traditional shipper that I actually ship Bellamy and Raven (which the show clearly doesn't) so I don't even GAF about Bellamy/Clarke. I am not ANTI-Bell/Clarke but I am more invested in Bell/Raven because I am clearly a crazy person. I'm telling you this because I want it to be clear that I'm not saying this as a Bellamy/Clarke shipper. (And I never liked Finn/Clarke.) Now that that's out of the way, I can say that I'm so disgusted with the fandom reaction to Lexa's death. I get that killing of lesbian characters is a thing. But it's not like the show could have sent Lexa off to college in another state. That's not the kind of show this is. If the actress had to leave the show (I was actually surprised she was even in this season because of Fear the Walking Dead) it just made logical sense to me that she would probably perish in some way. It could have been done another way, but it would have been abnormal for this show.

It just seems like it's incredibly selfish of the fans to campaign against a show in an effort to kill it. This is a show I fucking like that has low-ish ratings and that is kind of an underdog to begin with. And I would just really fucking appreciate it if fans (ex-fans?) weren't trying to actively sabotage it. And the worst part about it is that the fans aren't even upset at the text alone, they're mad about the social media accounts of the show runner (and apparently others?) -- which is just stupid, I'm sorry -- and they're mad that the character and relationship they were invested in was actually promoted by the network prior to the character's death? If they hadn't promoted the character or the relationship, they'd have been pissed at that too. (Also, that would have been really bizarre.) So I just don't see how any of this could have resulted in anything other than an angry mob.

There is something sacred about lesbian characters and lesbian couples on television and people get very passionate about it, especially in the LGBTQA community. Their feelings are still valid, but I don't have to like their actions. It's one thing to be upset and it's another thing to start an all-out campaign. I happen to be glad that The 100 was renewed. But I have to wonder that if the show doesn't survive another season. Who is to blame? And there's still Clarke. She's a bisexual character who is the lead in a show and she's still there. This is not me saying be grateful for what you get, this is me saying that if the show dies, so does Clarke.